Master of Science in Data Science

The Data Science MS degree is an interdisciplinary program offered by the Department of Computer Science at University of North Dakota.

Admission Requirements

Bachelor’s degree, normally in Computer Science.

Overall undergraduate GPA of at least 2.85.

Graduate Record Examination General Test or an undergraduate degree from a CSAB/ABET accredited degree program in Computer Science.

Satisfy the School of Graduate Studies’ English Language Proficiency requirements as published in the graduate catalog.

International applicants who have received their bachelor’s or master’s degree in the United States or English-speaking Canada are not required to submit the TOEFL or IELTS.

Applicants with a background in mathematics, science, or engineering will also be considered if they are adequately prepared in the field of computer science.

Students who do not meet all of these prerequisites may be admitted in Qualified or Provisional status with the obligation of meeting the remaining requirements early in their graduate study.

Degree requirements

Students seeking the Master of Science degree DS must satisfy all general requirements set forth by the School of Graduate Studies as well as particular requirements set forth by the Computer Science Department. More specifically, to obtain the MS in Data Science, students must complete 30 hours depending on the tracks.

There are two tracks:

Thesis track, which will be offered both online and on Campus. Students in thesis track are required to write and defend their theses.

Non-thesis, which will being offered ONLY online. Students in non-thesis track are required to fully develop, implement, and present a capstone project supervised by a graduate faculty member. The presentation, which is considered as a final oral examination, must be publicly presented to the faculty. Both tracks are required to take the same number of courses. The difference between the tracks are in the project, namely, capstone, and thesis. Both capstone and thesis are given the same weight.

4. Presentation of the Capstone Project results (CSCI 994 Capstone Project) including an oral presentation and written report (in a format suitable for publication) to the Faculty Advisory Committee, and interested faculty and students.

Thesis Option (30 credit hours):

1. The core of required courses (9 credits).

2. Two elective courses (6 credits). Only the following courses may count towards the electives: